Tag: anniversary

  • Firm hails Bi-Courtney  on anniversary

    Firm hails Bi-Courtney on anniversary

    A logistics company GWX has praised Bi-Courtney Aviation Services Limited (BASL), operators of the Murtala Muhammed Airport Terminal Two Lagos (MMA2), for successfully managing the world-class facility in line with global best practice in the past 10 years.
    MMA2 operated under the Public-Private Partnership concession agreement between the Federal Government and BASL, a member of The Resort Group, is the first successful privately-funded Design, Build, Operate and Transfer (DBOT) airport terminal in Nigeria.
    A statement signed by its General Manager Corporate Services Bright Aghogban, GWX congratulated Bi-Courtney on the successfully pioneering the PPP initiative in airport management.
    It also lauded the BASL management for consistently keeping the sprawling terminal in international standard since 2007.
    The statement reads: “MMA2 is indeed a great success story of a pioneering PPP initiative in the aviation industry in Nigeria. It reinforces the belief that if given a chance, Nigerians can build Nigeria and make the economy to become one of the 20 greatest in the world in line with the Federal Government’s vision 20:2020.
    “We also congratulate the Federal Government on giving PPP initiative a chance to thrive in the industry.”
    Aghogban said the company will continue to partner Bi-Courtney to raise the bar on air transport safety.
    According to him, GWX’s partnership with MMA2 on cargo facilitation has led to enhanced level of safety, security and efficiency in cargo processing and airlifting at the world-class facility.
    “The whole system at the cargo facility is 100 per cent automated – giving little or no room for human errors. Indeed our partnership with Bi-Courtney has brought some degree of safety awareness among stakeholders in the cargo segment especially among our cargo agents.”
    We have taken time to train them on various areas of the cargo business especially on security and safety,” he said.

  • TCCC honours Fafowora at 150th anniversary

    The Cathedral Church of Christ, Diocese of Lagos Church Nigeria, and (Anglican Communion) has honoured Ambassador Oladapo Olushola Fafowora on the occasion of its 150th anniversary and 71st commemoration of its iconic edifice at Marina, Lagos.

    The historian was decorated with the Cathedral Parish Award medal and presented a certificate of award in appreciation of his outstanding  input to the parish’s growth.

    He was recognised alongside Mrs. Modupe Oluwole, Mrs. Abeke Spaine, Lady Ololade Jokotade Oki and Prince Oyinade Fetuga at the thanksgiving ceremony.

    Ambassador Fafowora has worshipped at the Cathedral for 63 years. He started attending as a student at the CMS Grammar School. He was a former chorister and an occasional organist at the All Saints Cathedral in Kampala, Uganda during his service.

    He served as a member of the Cathedral’s Prisons’ Welfare Ministry, church historian and chairman of the its history sub-committee and head of a pilot project for the development of proper archives for the cathedral among others roles.

    He said: “I am delighted to receive the honour today. I wasn’t expecting it and it was totally unsolicited. I didn’t anticipate. I’ve been in the church for about 60 years and I can only say my parents set my foot on the path of God.

    “My school was then across the church. People make time for what they want and I think service to God was out of interest. My professional career did not stand in the way of work for God. It was more about service to humanity and the need to lift others.

    “Nigeria should priorities service to humanity than personal gains. My parents were civil servants and did all they could for humanity.”

    On “Celebrating God’s faithfulness” Rev. Michael Fape said believers should not hesitate to acknowledge God’s goodness in their lives and daily activities.

  • Sam Adeyemi marks 24th wedding anniversary

    Sam Adeyemi marks 24th wedding anniversary

    For most Nigerians, May 1 is known as Workers Day. But for the influential couple behind Daystar Christian Centre, Pastor Sam Adeyemi and his wife, Nike, the first of May is a day that brings forth sweet recollections of promises made and promises kept; the beginning of a journey that started 24 years ago and still going strong.

    The couple tied the nuptial knot on May 1, 1993 and through the vicissitudes of life have held fast to each other for solace and comfort, growing both their home and ministry and acting as shining example, that celebrity status can go hand in hand with marital bliss.

    Dynamic Lady Nike recently celebrated her 50th birthday and just returned to the country after an enjoyable birthday getaway in the Caribbean paradise of Trinidad and Tobago. She returned just in time for the couple to celebrate their 24th anniversary together in an atmosphere of sweet reminiscences involving their three beautiful children.

  • Another grim anniversary

    •That about 195 Chibok girls are yet to be found is a sad reminder of the April 14, 2014 episode

    Another grim anniversary of one of the darkest chapters in Nigeria’s history has come and gone, without assuaging the nation’s collective pain, frustration and humiliation, to say nothing of the grief of the families directly affected.

    April 14 marked the third anniversary of that accursed day when Boko Haram insurgents rounded up 276 female students in a secondary school in Chibok, in Chibok Local Government Area of Borno State, from their hostels and ferried them, unimpeded, to their stronghold in the bowels of the dreaded Sambisa Forest.

    For one full week after the abductions, the Federal Government was in abject denial. President Goodluck Jonathan claimed the whole thing had been fabricated by his detractors to drive home their claim that he was inept and clueless.

    To lend him support, his wife Dame Patience staged a bizarre inquisition seen around the world, in which she castigated Chibok school officials and political officials in the area, as well as the news media, for orchestrating a campaign of denigration against her husband’s administration.

    In the process, valuable time was lost.  The hot pursuit that might have made a difference was never mounted. There was hardly any sign that the national leadership was seized of the magnitude of the calamity that had befallen the nation.  The counter-insurgency operation sputtered on, casualty of inept and indifferent leadership, and corruption of the foulest kind.  Money voted for operations was converted to personal funds by the military top brass, or spent to purchase matériel that it would be courteous to call obsolescent. Demoralised, ill-equipped troops were pushed to front while commanding officers and political officials working for Dr Jonathan’s re-election fattened on the counter-insurgency budget.

    Offers of assistance by a scandalised international community were embraced coolly. It took persistent nudging and a visit by Pakistan’s teenage child rights activist and Nobel Prize winner Malala Yousafzai to move Dr Jonathan to agree to meet the distraught parents of the Chibok girls and show some empathy.

    The comprehensive failure of leadership capsulated in the foregoing would have continued if Dr Jonathan had remained in power. It must never be forgotten in any narrative on the Chibok tragedy.

    President Muhammadu Buhari infused the counter insurgence with purpose and vigour, prosecuted it diligently, and dislodged Boko Haram from a large swath of the North East across four states. It secured through negotiation the release of 21 of the traumatised captives.

    One of the iconic pictures of the break in this grim episode shows President Buhari receiving the returnees in the Villa, girls who had grown into women, many of whom had been forced into motherhood under the cruelest circumstances. It is at once a momento of the joy of survival and reunion, and of the pain of continuing captivity.

    In a series for the Saturday edition of The Nation, Olatunji Ololade has recently brought to light in horrific detail what the girls were forced to go through. Their stories of abuse, pain, and degradation the Chibok girls will forever haunt the nation’s conscience.

    They underscore the need to continue to pursue the release of the remaining Chibok girls with the utmost diligence, even as the rehabilitation of the returnees is expedited and the campaign to remove the last vestiges of the barbarous Boko Haram sect from Nigerian soil is sustained.

    There is no greater or more urgent task for the Buhari administration and the community of active citizens that had kept Chibok girls on our minds.

  • Wabara, Kalu, others grace church’s 150th anniversary

    Wabara, Kalu, others grace church’s 150th anniversary

    Ohambele in Ukwa East Local Government Area of Abia State has a lot to celebrate. It has produced successful people in business and politics, one stand-out scion being former Senate President Hon Adolphus Wabara.

    One sore area, though, is its forbidding roads, the Aba-Azumini probably the most worrisome. In fact, commuters have been bickering with the contractor handling the federal road project.

    But on April 23, not even the road could discourage dignitaries who turned up in the ancient kingdom to mark the 150th anniversary of Ohambele’s other icon, the St. Paul’s Anglican Church of Ukwa Diocese. Former governor of the state Dr. Orji Uzor Kalu led the way, and with him were Hon. Donatus Nwankpa (APC State chairman), Comrade Chris Akomas (former Abia Deputy Governor) Senator Nkechi Nwaogu, Chief Nyerere Ayim (APC Abia governorship candidate in 2015), Hon. Sam Nkire (APC BoT member), Mascott Uzor Kalu (former Abia Chief of Staff), and Chief Marshal Wokocha of Modum Associates Limited, among others. They joined the members of the Ohambele Archdeaconry of St. Paul’s to celebrate its 150 years of existence.

    The church, founded in 1865 by early missionaries and European traders, has retained its aesthetics and continued to play its role: winning souls. The church has produced sons and daughters who are ordained priests in both Anglican Church, Methodist and other churches.

    The event lasted for three days with a rally on April 21 and free medical care the following day, closing on Sunday 23 with a thanksgiving and fund-raise.

    The event was also used to honour about 37 persons, including Sir Adolphus Wabara, his brother and former CEO of Hallmark Bank, Marcus Wabara, the oldest lay reader of the church, and Chief Monday Nnah, among others, who have contributed to the growth of the church and the propagation of gospel in the community.

    In his homily, the Bishop of Ukwa Diocese, Rt. Rev. Dr. Samuel Kelechi Eze eulogised early missionaries for bringing Christianity to Ukwa, describing it as a courageous act. Eze urged Christians to imbibe the spirit of giving without murmuring. The Bishop also thanked the Ohambele people for allowing the early missionaries to settle in their midst, from where the gospel spread to other parts of Ukwa land and beyond.

    Chairman of the occasion, Rt. Hon. Adolphus Wabara thanked the priests and authorities of Anglican Church for keeping the history of the church, adding that so many communities in Abia State are yet to enjoy the gains of Christianity which the Ohambele people are enjoying.

    The chairman of the anniversary planning committee, Sir Marcus Wabara said the significance of the day lay in thanking God for using the land of Ohambele to take the gospel of salvation to other communities.

    Wabara said, “We rejoice in this reminder of our privilege and historic status as the first Ndoki community to embrace Christianity. From time immemorial and ever before the establishment of the pax Britannica, our great Ohambele Kingdom has confronted and overcome untold conflicts, difficulties and hardships.

    “Without fail, Almighty God has encouraged, reinforced, and strengthened our people. No wonder, then, that the Most High God occupies a special place in our kingdom, in our homes and in our hearts.”

    In an interview, the former governor of Abia State, Dr. Orji Kalu who was the special guest of honour said that it gladdened his heart that he was alive to see a church with such a great historical background attaining 150 years of life.

    Kalu, who described Marcus Wabara as a friend, said he also came with the APC family in the state to join the Anglican Communion in Ukwa and the country at large and the Wabaras to celebrate the day.

    The APC chairman, Hon. Donatus Nwankpa recalled that most schools and hospitals which were established by early missionaries helped in the intellectual grooming and physical development of Nigerians such as Nnamdi Azikiwe and Chinua Achebe, among others, who benefitted from their teachings and services.

    Nwankpa called on the people of Ohambele to ensure that the legacies handed over to them by their forefathers were guarded jealously.

  • Carbon Credit Network marks 5th anniversary

    Carbon Credit Network marks 5th anniversary

    Carbon Credit Network, a division of SMEFUNDS, dedicated to greener Africa is set to hold it fifth anniversary.

    The theme of the anniversary programme on Friday, April 28, is ‘Let’s make Africa greener by connecting to the people at the BoP’.

    The venue is Eko Hotels & Suites, Adetokunbo Ademola Street, Victoria Island, Lagos with stakeholders, entrepreneurs and prospect, economic and business companies, government officials and private organisations expected to grace the event.

    ‘‘Carbon Credit Network celebrates another year of addressing some burning issues on how to avert this quagmire as related to sustainability hiccups by connecting to the people at the BoP (Bottom of Pyramid). Join us and Let’s make Africa Greener,’’

    ‘’Sustainability development is an avenue that showcases how we can meet our own needs without jeopardizing the inherent opportunity that will propel our future generations ability to thrive where we failed in curbing the hazards. This demonstrates the commitment and insight as to how best our leadership ability to manage resources is attained, ’’ the company said in a statement.

    The company trains and  support the success of a network of purpose driven professionals who are on a mission to promote, educate and sell commendable and highly innovative renewable energy, Biofuels and Solar powered solutions to commercial and residential markets across Africa.

     

     

  • Ekiti school’s ‘uncommon’  50th anniversary

    Ekiti school’s ‘uncommon’ 50th anniversary

    Old students of Eyemote Comprehensive High School, Iyin-Ekiti, Ekiti State gathered to celebrate the golden jubilee of their alma mater. The occasion was a showcase for the inauguration of some projects executed by the old students. ODUNAYO OGUNMOLA reports.

    It was a great reunion for many of the old students of the 1978 set of Eyemote Comprehensive High School, (ECOHS), Iyin-Ekiti, Ekiti State as they hugged and exchanged banters with one another during the school’s 50th anniversary cerlebration. Some of them recalled some of their pranks and escapades during their days in the school.

    The school and its old students lined up a week-long activities in celebration of the 50th anniversary.

    Although it could be classified as a community-based secondary school, it has succeeded in producing eminent Nigerians among who are former Federal Minister, a state Chief Judge, a traditional ruler, member of Ekiti State House of Assembly, not less than 10 professors, senior military and paramilitary officers and top players in the civil service and the corporate world.

    It was a week to remember for the people of Iyin-Ekiti as the community throbbed with activities and played host to guests from far and near who came to celebrate either as old students, friends or well-wishers.

    Some of the activities lined up to mark the school’s achievements included candle light procession, environmental sanitation, football competition/inter-house sports, anniversary lecture, career talk, inauguration of projects, annual general meeting, award ceremony and thanksgiving service.

    The derelict school gate was replaced with a new-look one by the 1978 set to mark the Golden Jubilee. This gave the school a new look from the outside and was a tell-tale sign that something big was happening. Students were busy taking pictures at the new gate in excitement never experienced before.

    Eyemote Comprehensive High School was founded on February 6, 1967 with about 57 students (boys and girls). It was a product of the efforts of exemplary Iyin sons and daughters at home and in the Diaspora with the Ekiti Anglican Diocese being a co-founder and sponsor.

    It was initially known as Eyemote Secondary Commercial School because the school curriculum was based on commercial subjects. It was later changed and expanded to include all sciences, technology and vocational subjects.

    Instrumental to the establishment of the school was the former Military Governor of the old Western Region, Maj-Gen. Adeyinka Adebayo (retd), who is indigenous to Iyin and the late Oluyin of Iyin, Oba Julius Adeniyi Owolabi II who reigned for 47 years.

    While Gen. Adebayo gave approval for the establishment of ECOHS, Oba Owolabi assisted the school to move from its two previous temporary sites at St. George’s Modern School and All Saints Primary School to the current site.

    The late monarch personally supervised the laying of the foundation stone of the permanent site of the school on July 28, 1968. Oba Owolabi mobilised his chiefs and the entire Iyin community to ensure that the school began on a solid footing and stabilised to be a reputable school in Ekiti land.

    The school was founded on enviable tradition and a presentable reputation as if it were a creed. The school motto is “Towards Good Citizenship” and its colours are green and white.

    The tricolour disc represents the school’s bright future with the green representing the agricultural fertility of Ekiti land while the white stands for peaceful co-existence.

    The school’s first principal was Chief Edward Orhewere popularly known as “ESCO Daddy” by his students. He occupied the position between 1967 and 1971.

    The second principal was the late Chief Babalola Olajide who was in office between 1971 and 1975. The third longest serving principal was Chief Olufemi Araoye who was in the saddle between 1975 and 1982. The current principal is Mr. Adelaja Ajiniran.

    The first set of students of the school spent only five years instead of six that was expected, yet they proved their mettle by recording 100 per cent pass in the final West African School Certificate Examination in November, 1971.

    At the grand finale of the week-long celebration, the projects inaugurated included the school’s gate by the 1978 set, a block of four toilets constructed by the 1983 set and four blocks of classrooms renovated by the 1981 set.

    Speaking during the inauguration ceremony, the Oluyin of Iyin, Oba John Ademola Ajakaye, commended the old students for giving back to their alma mater and inspiring the students who would use the facilities.

    Oba Ajakaye said: “I feel happy that the old students are interested in their alma mater. The 1978 set gave the school a new gate while this block of classrooms we are inaugurating now was constructed by the 1981 set.

    “That is the way it should be because government cannot do everything. The present government is trying its best but it has not been easy financially with the government. I believe the problem will soon be solved.

    “The efforts of the old students are commendable, laudable and exemplary. I want to encourage them to do more as this will go a long way in taking their alma mater to greater heights.”

    The Oniropora of Iropora-Ekiti, Oba Joel Ajayi Olonibua, himself an old student of 1971 set said education is a major industry in Ekiti State and must be sustained by all and sundry.

    Oba Olonibua said: “This Golden Jubilee anniversary of our alma mater, Eyemote Comprehensive High School, is an opportunity to give back to the school that produced and nurtured us to greatness.

    “We will not rest on our oars; you will remember that Ekiti came first in the last National Examination Council (NECO) examination in Nigeria. The legacy of excellence in education should be sustained. What we have done is part of the ways we can sustain it.”

    Some ECOHS old students who were honoured with awards were former Minister of Aviation, Chief Babatunde Omotoba; Chief Judge of Ekiti State, Justice Ayodeji Daramola; Provost, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, Afe Babalola University, Ado-Ekiti (ABUAD), Prof. Olurotimi Sanya; Prof. Victor Popoola and Wing Commander Lawrence Akinwumi (retd).

    Also honoured were Gen. Adebayo, Oba Owolabi (posthumous),three ex-principals, Orhewere, Araoye and Mr. Afolabi Ajobiewe; the late Mrs. Funmilayo Atoki (posthumous), an old student who renovated a block of four classrooms in 2009 at a cost of over N3 million and the late Mr. Babalola Olajide ( posthumous).

    At their annual general meeting, President of Old Students’ Association, Reverend Christopher Abere, called on members to be more committed to the development of their alma mater by being interested in the affairs of the students.

    Abere said 50 years is long enough to allow both good and bad to happen. He thanked God for sparing the lives of the celebrators. He also led other members to observe a minute silence in honour and memory of members who had passed on.

    The ECOHS Old Students boss commended the various sets for projects carried out in the school, even as he stressed on the need for members to always pay their annual dues to enable the group to execute more projects and run the association seamlessly.

    Abere urged the present students to be more disciplined; saying their forbears endured a harsh environment that included reading inside the forest to become what they are today. He stressed that success does not come easy.

    He said: “We implore the present students to imbibe the spirit of hard work, submit themselves to discipline and have role models in order to carve a niche for themselves. They should work towards becoming responsible citizens which is our school motto and watchword.

    “The students should realise that this is the path the old students trod and many of them are better for it today. We pray that the present and coming generations will achieve more successes than today.

    “To achieve that, we also seek the co-operation of the parents and guardians because child upbringing is a joint effort of the parents, society and the school.”

    Also addressing fellow old students, Justice Daramola emphasised on prompt payment of annual dues, adding that ECOHS old students must show more commitment in years to come as the school grows in leaps and bounds.

    He said: “I have no doubt that when we work together as a team there is no limit to what we can achieve for our school. Our life as an association is what our thoughts make of it.

    “We must try and be bold in our resolve to have a viable old students association and Almighty God will come to our aid. We must be unrelenting in having viable and vibrant association that will serve as engine room for infrastructural development of our alma mater.”

    Delivering the anniversary lecture, Prof. Adeola Popoola, said the school which had a humble beginning had grown to be a big oak from which great men and women emerged to make impact in their various spheres of endeavour.

    In the lecture entitled “Eyemote Comprehensive High School: A Humble Beginning, A Future Assured,” Popoola described the school as a leading light which has held its own among the illustrious post-primary institutions in Ekiti State. He called for concerted efforts to build on the legacy.

    He urged the old students to mentor the young ones who are currently in the school to guide and give them a sense of direction in life so as to ensure their brighter tomorrow.

    Popoola said: “One of the areas in which members of the Old Students Association can help the school to grow and excel in the near foreseeable future is to mentor the current students.

    “Mentoring or mentorship is an innovative process in which the older and more experienced professionals inspire young ones along the path of sustained tutelage and career progression.

    “What this implies in essence is that members of our association can develop a constant visit to the school with a view to interacting with the students. Find out how they are getting on and help proffer solutions to some of the challenges they are going through.”

    Popoola suggested the establishment of a hall of fame to keep memory and the impact of the alumni alive to serve as inspiration to the contemporary students and setting up of scholarship scheme, bursary and endowments.

    Executive Secretary of the State Board for Technical and Vocational Education, Mrs. Bolajoko Adeyemi, delivered a career/motivational talk entitled “Secrets of High Flying Students.”

    Mrs. Adeyemi told the students that in spite of the moral decadence in the society, they can make up their mind to stand out and be morally upright to lay foundation for their academic success.

    She noted that every student has what it takes to be a high flyer but success is all about making a decision to be a successful person and doing the hard work to become such a person.

    Mrs. Adeyemi advised Eyemote students to have foresight, get their priorities right, concentrate on their studies and be consistent in the pursuit of success. She noted that “there is enough space at the top as the bottom is too crowded.”

    Besides the conferment of the awards, the grand finale also witnessed cutting of the anniversary cake, the launch of the school’s history book and the anniversary party.

  • Olubadan maiden anniversary starts on March 1

    Olubadan maiden anniversary starts on March 1

    Arrangements have been put in place for the take-off of the maiden anniversary of the Olubadan, Oba Saliu Akanmu Adetunji.

    The event, which begins on March 1, will feature street procession, tree planting and anniversary lecture.

    Chairman of the planning committee Chief Lekan Alabi said eminent Nigerians, who have contributed to the growth of the ancient city, would be honoured.

    The 41st Olubadan, Oba Adetunji, ascended the throne on March 4 last year.

    Alabi said other activities that signified the uniqueness of the ancient city would feature in the anniversary.

  • Artistes dazzle at church’s first anniversary

    Artistes dazzle at church’s first anniversary

    Diverse up and coming artistes dazzled guests with gospel music at the first  anniversary celebration of The Breath of Life youth church, located at Obanikoro Estate, Somolu, Lagos.

    Among those who performed at the event was gospel singer, Orjiifeanyi Henry, aka, Herrisoul, who was a back-up for Pastor Gabriel Eziashi at the last Experience. Others are Incredibles Dance Group; Boluwatife Tanimomo aka Mc Tife and Anibobo, a comedian. The church choir also thrilled guests.

    Welcoming guests to the event, Youth Pastor, Temitope Odebiyi, said that the church aims to raise leaders, by bringing young people together under an atmosphere where they can be challenged and inspired to reach their ultimate potential in life.

    “The church builds youths and helps them to think outside the box to become entrepreneurs,” she said.

    “We equip them with relevant skills that will enable them contribute meaningfully to the society.  We raise Godly youths who can make a difference in the world. We bring them together in the right atmosphere to see that their strength is harnessed to do something profitable for themselves and the society at large.”

    Pastor, Breath of Life Ministry, Pastor Samson Jedafe, added that the youth church was set up to make the reality of Christ to burn I the heart of the youths.

    He also urged youths to focus on Jesus and avoid the distraction from social media and songs that do not preach the gospel of Jesus Christ.

  • EKSU VC marks first anniversary

    Ekiti State University (EKSU) Vice Chancellor, Prof Samuel Oye Bandele clocked one year in office last Friday.

    He marked the day with prayers during the first session the University Senate held in the newly constructed Academic Building.

    Various dons led prayers during the session.  Prof F. M. Aderibigbe, a Senior Pastor of Grace Covenant Church, Ado-Ekiti, prayed for the vice-chancellor, his family and the university community; the Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Development), Prof Iyiola Oluwaleye, thanked God for the peace on the campus in the past one year and guidance for the VC; while Prof Abdu-Raheem prayed in the Islamic way for God’s mercy on the VC and the university.

    The session was rounded up by Prof Femi Ola, who asked God for provision and peace of mind and favour for the VC to complete his tenure.

    Bandele acknowledged that  his achievements were through the grace of God and that he would continue to perform his duties without fear or favour.

    He promised to continue making his administration open and free of fraud.